Apartments For Rent in Houston, TX

8,321 rentals

Apartments For Rent Near Houston, TX

We found 30 more apartments matching your filters just outside Houston

Types of apartment in Houston, TX

Houston apartments range from garden-style complexes to mid-rise and high-rise towers. In Montrose, Midtown, and the Museum District, many apartments sit in newer brick and stucco buildings with balconies, parking garages, and shared courtyards. Downtown and the Galleria area have more glassy towers and larger mid-rises. In the Heights and Rice Military, you also see houses for rent, including bungalows, townhomes, and newer narrow homes with garages at street level. Interiors often include open kitchens, hard flooring, and in-unit laundry, but layouts can vary a lot by age of the building.

In West University, Upper Kirby, and Greenway Plaza, apartments often look polished and newer from the outside, with controlled entry and structured parking. East Downtown and the Near Northside mix older brick buildings, warehouse-style conversions, and newer low-rise apartments. In Meyerland, Spring Branch, and parts of southwest Houston, garden apartments and single-story rental homes are more common. A practical tradeoff in Houston is parking, elevator access, and flood-related building design. Many renters also notice whether apartments have covered parking, first-floor entries, or long interior hallways.

Getting around Houston, TX

METRO, the city bus and light rail system, covers key rental areas like Downtown, Midtown, the Museum District, and the Texas Medical Center. Driving is common, and access to I-10, 59, and Loop 610 shapes many apartment searches. Parking can come with apartments, but guest parking varies. Walking works better in Montrose, Rice Village, and parts of the Heights. Biking can work on trails like Buffalo Bayou and in central neighborhoods, though street comfort varies.

Living in Houston, TX

Houston is known for museums, parks, food, and major job centers. You can spend time at Hermann Park, Buffalo Bayou Park, the Menil Collection, or Minute Maid Park. The city also has strong work in energy, health care, shipping, aerospace, and engineering, with big employment hubs around Downtown, the Texas Medical Center, Greenway Plaza, and the Energy Corridor. That mix affects where many people rent and which apartments draw interest.